The massive transport bottleneck between Boggo Road (Dutton Park) and the Gold Coast’s Varsity Lakes will now stretch until at least the end of the month after a significant standoff with unions delayed essential safety and track upgrades.
A Morning of Gridlock

The disruption began on 10 April and has since grown into a significant challenge for people trying to get to work or school. On Monday morning, the situation reached a breaking point when commuters arriving at stations like Northgate and Geebung found themselves waiting in the heat for nearly an hour.
Instead of the usual quick transfer, people were met with lines that stretched across bridges and down suburban streets. Many residents found it impossible to even leave the stations to call for a ride-share service because the crowds were so thick.
The Math Behind the Mess
The main reason for the long wait times is a simple gap between train capacity and bus availability. While trains usually arrive every three minutes during the busy morning period, the replacement buses have only been arriving about every eight minutes. This difference caused a huge backlog of people on the platforms. Transport providers admitted that the number of people needing a ride was 50 per cent higher than they had originally planned for.
Even though 100 extra buses were brought in from other states and hundreds of drivers were hired to help, it was still not enough to move everyone quickly.
Local Business and Resident Impact
The chaos has spilled out of the stations and into the surrounding neighbourhoods. Local shop owners near the stations have seen their shopfronts blocked by hundreds of people waiting for a ride. Some business owners mentioned that they had never seen such large crowds in their area before.
Commuters who usually have a 35-minute trip reported that their travel time had tripled to over an hour and a half. Many people chose to get off at different stations hoping for a shorter line, only to find the same problems elsewhere.
| Dates | Lines Impacted | Where Trains Stop Running | What Happens |
| 3–10 April | Multiple lines (incl. Beenleigh) | Banoon ↔ Boggo Road | Buses replace trains (affects Moorooka, Salisbury, Rocklea, etc.) |
| 11 April | Multiple lines | Varsity Lakes ↔ Boggo Road | Larger closure including Gold Coast line |
| 12–19 April | Beenleigh + Gold Coast | Varsity Lakes ↔ Boggo Road | Continued full closure southside |
| 20–26 April | Beenleigh + Gold Coast | Banoon ↔ Boggo Road | Southside closures continue (Moorooka still impacted) |
Looking Toward the End of April
These disruptions are expected to continue through to 30 April. While some tracks north of the city are scheduled to reopen sooner, the lines connecting the city to the Gold Coast will see ongoing changes. Between 20 April and the end of the month, the Beenleigh and Gold Coast lines will run as a combined service, but there will be no trains at all between Banoon and Boggo Road. Transport officials say they are looking for ways to add more services in high-demand areas, but for now, the community is being asked to prepare for longer travel times and more crowded platforms.
Published Date 14-April-2026












